Nigeria's Premier Art Auction House

Arthouse Contemporary is currently hiring two positions: Communications Coordinator and Operations Coordinator.

COMMUNICATIONS COORDINATOR:

The Role:
Arthouse Contemporary is looking for a savvy communications professional to showcase the breadth and depth of our collection, programs, and activities. The Communications Coordinator will work with internal and external stakeholders to create immersive storytelling experiences for our community, increase brand awareness beyond Nigeria, and encourage active engagement from our audiences. This is an exciting opportunity to be part of a creative, passionate, and tight-knit team working with some of the most talented artists in Africa. As the Communications Coordinator, you will gain hands-on experience, while immersing yourself in Nigeria’s evolving art scene. This is a part-time position (3 days a week) based in Lagos, Nigeria.

Responsibilities
● Work closely with the Founder and Lead Curator to create a communications strategy and calendar to promote and tell the Arthouse story
● Define the brand identity, voice and narrative on all externally-facing content, including visual, written, and video to ensure content is consistent with the brand
● Responsible for the creation, publication, monitoring, and management of content across online and offline channels
● Create and schedule content across all social media platforms and proactively identify news-worthy stories to highlight
● Analyze social media metrics and establish benchmarks to inform strategy
● Contribute to social media strategy and overview for exhibitions and other marketing initiatives as needed, including live-posting during events
● Curate stories around the Foundation’s residency program and research artists to develop content for digital channels
● Build out newsletter audience, including curating and sending out the monthly newsletter
● Update web content and liaise with 3rd party for updates to website development
● Identify new opportunities, publications and partnerships to boost brand awareness locally, regionally and internationally
● Draft press releases, provide PR support as needed, and liaise with media contacts
● Provide project support for team members during major auctions and quarterly exhibitions, and other aspects of Arthouse’s programs

Desired skills
● Copywriting, editing and proof-reading skills
● Understanding of social media platforms, products and tools
● Knowledge of and a strong interest in art history, photography, and design
● Good knowledge of art publications and the Nigerian media landscape
● Excellent organizational skills and attention to detail
● Independent judgement and decision-making skills
● Creativity and flexibility, with the ability to prioritise and manage projects with minimal supervision
● Proactive, self-driven, and self-managed with a strong work ethic

OPERATIONS COORDINATOR:

The Role:
Arthouse Foundation is looking for a dynamic individual with project management skills to support our daily activities. The Operations Coordinator will assist the Lead Curator with preparation for auctions and exhibitions, in addition to being the first point of contact for artists in the residency program. The ideal candidate will be organized, detail-oriented, proactive and thorough with all relevant documentation as it pertains to Arthouse. This is an exciting opportunity to be part of a creative, passionate, and tight-knit team working with some of the most talented artists in Africa. This is a part-time position (3 days a week) based in Lagos, Nigeria.

Responsibilities
● Maintain a detailed inventory of art pieces, sales, auctions, and exhibitions; including photographing, captioning, and labelling artworks
● Develop and maintain records and contracts for exhibitions activity and correspondence with artists, museums, galleries and collectors
● Event coordination for auctions (three times a year), quarterly exhibitions and related events
● Assist with program management for artists in residence, including answering inquiries and phone calls, coordinating travel plans, and more
● Providing information and assistance to artists regarding city attractions, restaurants and points of interest
● Facilitate smooth operations of the residence, including monitoring utilities, provisions, and troubleshooting maintenance issues
● Ensure all invoices are submitted efficiently and track payment for vendors
● Provide the team with general administrative, logistical, and project management support
● Research best practices and emerging trends in the art industry

Desired skills
● Undergraduate degree
● Knowledge of and a strong interest in art history, photography, and design
● Basic knowledge of art handling practices
● Good knowledge of the Lagos cultural scene
● Independent judgement and decision-making skills
● Ability to manage shifting priorities, whilst still maintaining accuracy and ensuring efficiency around internal systems and procedures
● Must be responsible and able to exercise absolute discretion with artists, clients and collectors
● Proactive, self-driven, and self-managed with a strong work ethic

APPLY:

Please email Joseph Gergel (joseph@arthouse-ng.com) with the subject “Communications Coordinator” or “Operations Coordinator”. Attach your resume and include a few paragraphs about your interest in the role.

Deadline: February 9, 2020

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As demand for Nigerian art booms abroad, a homegrown movement looks to inspire domestic collectors too

Visitors look at works on display at Art X Lagos, an international art fair that took over the Lagos Civic Center in November 2017. (Siobhan O’Grady / For The Times)

Late last year, a family in north London contacted the Bonhams auction house and asked one of its experts on African art to come see a painting that might solve a decades-old mystery.

In 1973 and 1974, the Nigerian modernist Ben Enwonwu painted three portraits of Princess Adetutu Ademiluyi. The artist was Igbo and the princess was Yoruba — ethnic groups that had been pitted against each other in a brutal civil war — and the portraits were widely seen as a turning point in reconciliation between the two groups.

But all three versions of “Tutu” had been missing since before the artist’s death in 1994.
One of them, it turned out, was the painting that hung inconspicuously in the London family’s home. Initial estimates suggested it could sell for up to $417,000.

In a February auction that was livestreamed to a room of about 100 participants in Lagos, Nigeria, an anonymous telephone bidder paid $1.68 million.

The sale was the latest sign that Nigeria has arrived in the world of contemporary art. Demand is booming in the U.S. and Europe — but most significantly in Nigeria.

The newfound interest there is part of a larger cultural and economic revival. It wasn’t long ago that moving abroad or catering to outsiders’ perceptions of their country was the only way for artists here to survive. But as the economy has surged — diversifying from oil into manufacturing, telecommunications and a thriving film industry to give Nigeria the biggest gross domestic product in Africa — so has interest in fashion, music and art.

That has fueled a rise in the number of galleries and auction houses. It has also allowed many artists to make a living at home, reclaiming their Nigerian identities with creations that take on themes that resonate with a Nigerian audience, such as corruption, national politics and gender relations.
Nigeria remains a poor country, with a per-capita GDP of about $6,000 and more than half of its 186 million people living in poverty. But some artists raised there and educated at local art schools say that even their parents are starting to embrace art as a career choice and abandon old beliefs that only doctors, lawyers and businessmen can earn money.

The demand for art has grown so much in recent years that auctions are popping up in some unusual places.
As a British auctioneer called out bids one night in November, men in white gloves carried pieces of art to the front of a Kia car dealership showroom. The works ranged from paintings large enough to take up an entire wall to sculptures so small they could be held in the palm of a hand — one of which sold for about $10,000.

The event, which garnered interest from international and Nigerian collectors, was the 19th auction in nine years that Arthouse Contemporary held in Lagos, where it is based. The first ones took place at the Wheatbaker hotel in the upscale Ikoyi neighborhood. But expanding interest presented the organizers with a problem familiar to artists and gallery owners across this mega-city of 22 million people: a lack of spaces to display art.

“This is almost as white cube as it can get,” said Joseph Gergel, a consultant for Arthouse, describing the Kia showroom as a stark modern gallery. “It happened out of necessity.”
Though Arthouse has traditionally targeted the wealthy, it recently launched a more affordable series of auctions. “The idea is to engage a new group of collectors who may be scared away by prices in the main auction,” Gergel said.

Late last year, the second annual Art X Lagos, West Africa’s first international art fair, drew more than 9,000 people — bank executives, government officials, the emir of the northern city of Kano and other potential customers, as well as ordinary citizens who came to witness the Lagos Civic Center’s transformation into a gallery for a weekend. There were installations, paintings, photographs, record sleeves and sculptures — including seven large wooden pieces that were crafted by Enwonwu for the Daily Mirror newspaper in 1960.

In one of the more political exhibits, photographs by Rahima Gambo depicted ordinary life in Nigeria’s northeast and the toll of government negligence and attacks by the extremist group Boko Haram on schools and children.

Tokini Peterside, the 31-year-old founder of the fair, said one of her goals was “to encourage the increasing number of wealthy West Africans to see themselves as collectors and to see art as an investment.”

Another was to offer the region’s artists a rare opportunity in an art world dominated by the West: the chance to display and sell their work at home.

“There’s a generation of young, vibrant artists of Nigerian or African origin who have felt that the gallery infrastructure in West Africa is not sufficiently developed for them to connect with the international art market from their home base,” Peterside said. “For generations, when it comes to exporting its cultural capital and so many other things, Africa has had to go overseas.”


Yaw Owusu, a Ghanaian artist, stands in front of his work at Art X Lagos in November 2017. (Siobhan O’Grady / For The Times)

Yaw Owusu, a 25-year-old Ghanaian artist, said Art X and similar events help him feel grounded at home in West Africa. “I do not need to move to New York or Europe to get my works acquired,” he said.

Still, the Nigerian government has work to do if it wants its artists to stay in the country. The National Museum in Lagos is housed in a colonial-style building indistinguishable from other run-down government offices around the city. Built in 1957, its collection is largely ethnographic. Inside the dimly lighted main exhibition hall, ancient artifacts sit covered in layers of dust.

There were plans years ago to build a new national museum next door, said Chika Okeke-Agulu, a professor of art history at Princeton University who specializes in African contemporary art. But after construction began, the museum plans fell apart, and the government sold the property.

“That tells you something about why it’s even difficult to talk about museums in Nigeria,” Okeke-Agulu said. “Who is going to build a museum?”
Today the property is an unremarkable shopping mall, where families gather at KFC or buy groceries at a small supermarket.

Tucked away down a nearby street is Rele Gallery, a space that offers a lens into some of what is most exciting about the contemporary art scene in Nigeria.

Hanging on the whitewashed walls are works by artists including Marcellina Akpojotor, whose realistic portraits of Nigerian women are made in part out of small cutouts of local ankara textiles. In her “Power Series,” Akpojotor explores womanhood and education. The series, which features images of women reading books and newspapers, was inspired by her grandmother, who was denied an education but pursued knowledge as a means of empowerment.

One of Akpojotor’s portraits was recently selected as the cover for a new edition of “Jagua Nana,” a 1961 novel by the late Nigerian writer Cyprian Ekwensi that tells the story of an aging sex worker soul-searching in 1960s Lagos.

Much of the work at Rele is created by younger artists and appeals to younger collectors. Most pieces usually go for less than $3,000.

Olakiitan Ade, a former curator at Rele, said some shoppers are looking to invest in their first pieces of artwork, or have been to outdoor markets in Lagos and are looking for higher quality work but “not too abstract, not too experimental.”

Last year, Lagos state Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode announced plans to open a number of new museums in Lagos as part of a government bid to boost tourism. But Ade is skeptical.
“The government does not see the relevance or economic gain or social capital in art or culture,” she said.

Modupeola Fadugba, a multimedia Nigerian artist who created an installment titled “Heads Up, Keep Swimming,” which debuted at a clothing and accessories store in the upscale Victoria Island neighborhood of Lagos. (Siobhsn O’Grady / For The Times)

Indeed, for decades Nigerian art seemed to be valued more outside Nigeria than inside.
Enwonwu, who was born in 1917, made his name in Britain, where he studied art and anthropology in the 1940s. He went on to become one of Africa’s best-known artists and the father of Nigerian Modernism.
His work was so revered in Britain that Queen Elizabeth II sat for him to sculpt her.

In other ways, he was ahead of his time. He never abandoned his Nigerian roots and eventually returned home, where his work — especially his portrait of the princess — made him a national hero and the rare example of an African artist who made his living in two worlds.

He often criticized the lack of access Nigerians had to their own art. African artists, he wrote in a 1956 essay, faced “the humiliation of having to listen to lectures on African art in foreign art galleries and museums.”

Those days finally appear to be coming to an end.

O’Grady is a special correspondent.

I be like fly wey fire dey draw – Peju Alatise

‘Art dey do like society and society too dey copy art, so wit di way tins dey go for Nigeria, di tin dey turn belle.

Na so award winning artist, architect and writer Peju Alatise take mark her 20 years wey she don dey do art for di ‘Paradox, Paradigms and Parasites’ exhibition.

  • Di artist wey dey dance naked
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  • Nigeria artwork don sell for £1.2mn

Alatise use dis artwork to tok about di ‘Aluu four’ students wey dem kill for Port Harcourt for 2012

Di artist tok say “e come be like say to stay for Nigeria come be like fly wey fire dey draw, pesin no know wetin to do, weda to run comot or to stay but make I tok as e dey do me for belle.”

With art work like ‘silence’ wey dey tok about young African pipo wey dia boat capsize as dem dey cross Mediterranean sea to go Europe and many goment do like dem no see, dem no hear.


Many of Alatise art torchlight how Nigeria suppose dey treat women

‘Flying Girls’ and ‘Deep sleep’ show how important e be to allow girls go school and for schools to dey safe wey be say dem no go kidnap or rape dem dia, make dem know book.

‘Rotten to di core’, ‘see me see somebody’, ‘unconscious struggle’ and ‘sticks’ na way she dey take hala make pipo begin wake up tok and do somtin about di social and political mata for Nigeria.

As election don dey come, she dey advise make young pipo begin gada informate wey go help dem comot corrupt politicians if dem ready to change di way tins be.

Kavita Chellaram: Championing the African Art Market

In 2007, with a married daughter and a son away at school, Indian-born Kavita Chellaram decided that it was time to give the arts her full attention. 10 years later, the art sector in Nigeria is recording some remarkable changes, and this woman’s passion has a lot to do with it.

Most developed countries enjoy governments that are involved in the growth and sustenance of its Arts sector. In Nigeria, however, artists and art practitioners struggle independently to get things done as support from the government is almost non-existent.

Aware of this situation, in 2007, Chellaram said to herself ‘‘I’ve gotten my children educated. Now … I can help African art.

These words, followed by meticulous planning, ushered in the birth of Arthouse Contemporary, an auction house based in Lagos and specialising in modern and contemporary art from West Africa.

“When I began to explore Nigerian art,” Chellaram recalls “it was difficult to access information and artworks. There was very little documentation and no transparency in prices…”

Observing auction houses in India and how they had created an infrastructure for the market to develop and sustain itself, Chellaram decided to adopt the same model for Nigeria.

Arthouse Contemporary has since grown to be the leading auction platform in West Africa, holding two main auctions annually in addition to the Affordable Art Auction which kicked off in 2016 and holds once a year. Now, collectors are able to access Arthouse Contemporary’s vast online database and this helps to provide a clear understanding of value and pricing.


Arthouse Showroom

 

Kavita’s work exceeds auctioning as there are also Arthouse -The Space and Arthouse Foundation, subdivisions created for exhibitions, and full time artist residency programmes, and through the activities of the Arthouse Collective, artists like Ben Enwonwu, Kolade Oshinowo, Yusuf Grillo and Uche Okeke have attained global recognition.


Arthouse Foundation – Artist Resident, Dipo Doherty, Winter 2016 Session

 


Yusuf Grillo Retrospective, Kia Showroom, 2015

 

It is rather intriguing that an expatriate is completely passionate and occupied by an industry that is neither her country’s nor within her continent, but home, they say, is where the heart is.

Nigeria is home to me.” Kavita explains “… I have raised my family here, and I have watched my children and grandchildren grow up in Nigeria

Nigeria, in turn, acknowledges Kavita’s work, and amongst her many recognitions is a chieftaincy title from Oshogbo, a town in Western Nigeria famous for its rich history in championing local art practices.

Arthouse’s 3rd Affordable Art Auction Relishes a Successful Outing

On its third outing on Saturday, March 3 at the Kia Showroom in Victoria Island, Lagos, the Arthouse Contemporary Affordable Art Auction raked in a total of N26,668,000, selling 62% of the lots.

The top-selling work at the event, which started by 6 pm and featured 107 lots from emerging and established contemporary artists, was Rom Isichei’s oil on paper, titled “Vacancy of Stares” at N1,150,000. Following closely on its heels was Gerald Chukwuma’s mixed media diptych, “Akuko Ifo”, which sold for N920,000.

Among the auction’s other top-sellers were Ebong Ekwere’s wood sculpture, “Dancing Torso”, Reuben Ugbine’s “Meditation” II, Abayomi Barber’s pastel on paper painting, “Dream Man” and Ato Delaquis’ acrylic on canvas “The Lagoon”, all of which sold for N 805,000.

Also featured at this edition of the auction were charity lots by Muraina Oyelami, A. Akande, Joseph Eze, Tony Enebeli and Dipo Doherty, which raised a total of N 870,000. This segment of the auction, as the name implies, was meant to support the efforts of the Arthouse Foundation, the non-profit artist residency programme in Lagos. Hence, the proceeds from these lots will go directly to supporting the programmes of the Arthouse Foundation, including its residencies, workshops, talks and public events.

The auction preview, ART NIGHT OUT, took place two days before the auction on Thursday, March 1 at the Kia Showroom. It was a night of art, music and live performances with refreshments provided by Thai Thai, Le Connaisseur, 7UP and Krispy Kreme. There was also a live drawing performance by Dipo Doherty and a DJ set by ISSIMO. Guests, in addition, participated in the annual Selfie Competition, with the person with the most likes winning an original artwork. The Affordable Art Auction, according to the organisers, “aims to engage new collectors with all works of art estimated below one million naira.”

It could be called the sister edition to the May and November auctions run by the Arthouse Contemporary. But its distinguishing feature is the fact that artworks are scaled to an affordable and accessible price point. It enjoys the generous support of Kia Motors, Le Connaisseur, Krispy Kreme and 7UP.

–Adepuji writes from Lagos

Reference
thisdaylive.com

You Can Bid For Artworks Below N1m At Arthouse Affordable Art Auction 2018

You can bid for artworks below N1 million naira at the 2018 edition of Arthouse Contemporary Affordable Art auction, an international auction house that specialises in modern and contemporary art from West Africa.

The auction which comes up on March 3, 2018, by 6pm at the Kia Showroom, 308 Adeola Odeku Street, Victoria Island, Lagos targets new collectors.

“The Affordable Art Auction aims to engage new collectors with all works of art estimated below one million naira. As the sister edition to the May and November auctions, the Affordable Art Auction features artworks that are scaled to an affordable and accessible price point,” said Kavita Chellarams, CEO, Arthouse Contemporary.

This edition of the Affordable Art Auction features 108 lots by leading modern and contemporary artists. This auction will feature works by modern masters including Ben Enwonwu, Uche Okeke, Bruce Onobrakpeya, David Dale, Abayomi Barber, Kolade Oshinowo, Muraina Oyelami, Jacob Afolabi, Jimoh Buraimoh, Ato Delaquis, Solomon Wangboje and Susanne Wenger.

Leading contemporary artists include Lemi Ghariokwu, Gerald Chukwuma, Diseye Tantua, Tola Wewe, Uchay Joel Chima and Ben Osaghae. The Affordable Art Auction also features many emerging and rising artists, including Yadichinma Ukoha-Kalu, Dennis Osadebe, Abisola Gbadamosi, Williams Chechet, Dare Adenuga, Patrick Akpojotor, Habeeb Andu and Femi Morakinyo, many of whom are participating for the first time at auction.

The Affordable Art Auction places a special focus on photography, featuring image-based work by Leonce Raphael Agbdojelou, Kadara Enyeasi, Logo Oluwamuyiwa, Stephen Tayo, Tam Fiofori, Reze Bonna and Dandelion Eghosa.

The auction preview, Art Night Out, will take place on March 1, 2018, 6-10pm at the Kia Showroom, featuring art, music and live performances.

The auction will also feature charity lots to support the Arthouse Foundation, a non-profit artist residency programme in Lagos, with artworks donated by artists Muraina Oyelami, A. Akande, Joseph Eze and Tony Enebeli. The proceeds from these charity lots will go directly to supporting the programmes of the Arthouse Foundation, including its residencies, workshops, talks and public events.

Artworks are available for public viewing at the Kia Showroom, Friday, March 2, 2018, 10 am to 6pm, and Saturday, March 3, 2018, 10am to 1pm. The Affordable Art Auction is generously supported by Kia Motors, Le Connaisseur and 7UP.

Press Release – Affordable Art Auction 2017

Arthouse Contemporary is pleased to announce the results of the second edition of the Affordable Art Auction on February 11, 2017, at the Kia Showroom in Lagos, Nigeria. Featuring 123 lots from emerging and established contemporary artists, the auction brought in a total of N40,526,000 during the evening’s sale, with 62% of the lots sold.

The Affordable Art Auction aims to engage emerging markets and the rise of a new collector base, with all works of art estimated below N1,000,000. As the third annual auction after the May and November auctions of modern and contemporary art, the Affordable Art Auction features artworks that are scaled to a more affordable and accessible price point. The Affordable Art Auction aims to attract both seasoned collectors and first time buyers to build a stronger network of local clients in Nigeria.

The top sale of the auction was the late Ben Osaghae’s Child Labour 2, an oil on canvas that sold for N1,610,000. Other leading sales of the auction included Bruce Onobrakpeya’s Three Elephant Masquerades, a metal foil relief that sold for N1,380,000, Alimi Adewale’s Hustle and Bustle, that sold for N1,207,500, and an untitled painting by Tola Wewe that sold for N1,150,000.

This edition of the auction also featured charity lots by Dipo Doherty, Olumide Onadipe, Sade Thompson and Uchay Joel Chima, in support of the Arthouse Foundation, a non-profit artist residency programme, that raised a total of N700,000. The proceeds from these charity lots will go directly to supporting the programmes of the Arthouse Foundation, including its residencies, workshops, talks and public events. The Affordable Art Auction was generously supported by Kia and Prosecco Fantinel.

Founded in 2007, Arthouse Contemporary is an international auction house that specialises in modern and contemporary art from West Africa. Arthouse Contemporary aims to create awareness of the scope of contemporary art in the region, encourage international recognition towards its talented artists and strengthen the economy of its art market.

The eighteenth edition of the Arthouse Contemporary auction of Modern and Contemporary Art will take place on May 22, 2017 at the Wheatbaker Hotel, Lagos. For more information, please visit Arthouse Contemporary’s website at www.arthouse-ng.com, or contact Nana Sonoiki by telephone at 08052500195 or Sumbo Biobaku at 08055099096.

Ola Dele Kuku Venice Achitecture

Arthouse Contemporary is pleased to announce its support of the Nigerian Pavilion at the 15th Venice Architectural Biennale, entitled Diminished Capacity, featuring the work of Nigerian artist and architect Ola-Dele Kuku, taking place May 26- November 27, 2016 at the Spazio PUNCH – Guidecca, Venice, Italy. Diminished Capacity marks the first time that Nigeria has had a dedicated pavilion at a Venice Biennale edition.

CURATOR’S NOTE:

Diminished Capacity intends to analyze a historical transaction moment with the ambition to rewrite history, starting from Nigeria to provide unpublished interpretations. In this condition, to rewrite history becomes a necessary evolution. The wrong reading of Africa transforms the continent itself into a country poised in perpetual opposition to restlessness; what is its identity in forms and structures? “Africa is not a country!” In that conflict, the first Nigerian Pavilion wants to prospect new methodologies. Conflict is one of the recurrent themes in the work of Ola-Dele Kuku. The architect–artist sees that as one of the driving mechanisms in our world, and as a tool to set change in motion. “Conflict has played a crucial role since the dawn of creation, from the stories of the Big Bang to the paradise of Adam and Eve.” Throughout his practice, Ola-Dele Kuku has consistently reshaped representation in a timely challenge. Working with drawing, installation, and objects, he has revisited the mainstays of architectural representational methods – plan, elevation, section – to inject unsettling slippages into their rigorous formalism. This new body of work fully embraces an analytical socio-philosophical slant that confronts complex issues such as resource depletion and their management, migration, micro and macro global changes, and the diminished capacity of countries amplified by multiple applications of manipulative strategies. – Camilla Boemio (curator, critic)

ARTIST’S NOTE:

‘The proposed project theme titled Diminished Capacity is a reflection of the contemporary global phenomenon of ‘Socio-Cultural Conflicts’, with specific focus on the role of ‘Information / Communication’ and the ‘Mass Media’. The exhibition will be presented as a reaction to the frictions of social communication and the mass media, vis-à-vis the notion of a unitary tendency of society and common values. The contemporary sociology of mass media communication reveals a consistent presentation of agendas rather than reports which are illustrated by selected interest in particularities, focus and oversight’. – Ola-Dele Kuku (artist, architect)

The Commissioner of the Nigerian Pavillion is Nkanta George Ufot, Director, International Cultural Relations, Ministry of Information and Culture. The Nigerian Pavilion is curated by Camilla Boemio, with associate curator Mr. Koku Konu and project manager Fabrizio Orsini. Colaborators and sponsors include the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, Abuja Nigeria; Embassy of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Rome Italy; Arthouse Contemporary Ltd, Lagos Nigeria; KU Leuven – St Lucas Architecture (Int Master’s Programme, Gent, Belgium; LMS Gallery, Brussels, Belgium, and Phillipe Laeremans Tribal Art Gallery, Brussels, Belgium.

Exhibition promotion and communication is supported by Arthouse Contemporary Ltd, Lagos, Nigeria. For more information, please contact Joseph Gergel by email at joseph@arthouse-ng.com.

Please visit the website of the Nigerian Pavilion at www.nigerianpavilion.org

May 9th Auction Results

Arthouse Contemporary, West Africa’s premiere auction house, is pleased to announce the results of the sixteenth edition of its auction of Modern and Contemporary Art on May 9, 2016, at the Wheatbaker Hotel in Lagos, Nigeria. Featuring 98 lots from leading modern and contemporary artists, the auction bought in a total of N176,524,500 ($882,623) during the evening’s sale, with 69% of the lots sold.

The top sale of the evening included Ben Enwonwu’s Obitun Dancers, an oil on canvas from 1990 that sold for N52,900,000 ($264,400), setting a record for a sale of Enwonwu’s work in Nigeria. Other leading sales of the evening included Yusuf Grillo’s Threatened Innocence, an oil on board from 1999-2002, that sold for N18,400,000 ($92,000), Ben Enwonwu’s African Dance Ensemble (1960), selling for N9,200,000 ($46,000), Ben Enwonwu’s Haze (1972), selling for N9,200,000 ($46,000), and Amon Kotei’s Untitled (2005), selling for N4,600,000 ($23,000). This edition of the auction also featured charity lots by Uchay Joel Chima, Obinna Makata, and Lekan Onabanjo, raising NGN 1,150,000 ($5,750) for Standard Chartered Bank’s Seeing is Believing, which aims to tackle avoidable blindness. Arthouse Contemporary’s auction was proudly sponsored by Standard Chartered Bank, Wheatbaker Hotel, and Veuve Clicquot. The auction was led by noted auctioneer John Dabney.

Founded in 2007, Arthouse Contemporary is an international auction house that specialises in modern and contemporary art from West Africa. With auctions held twice a year in Lagos, Arthouse Contemporary aims to create awareness of the scope of contemporary art in the region, encourage international recognition towards its talented artists, and strengthen the economy of its art market. The seventeenth edition of the Arthouse Contemporary auction will take place on November 21, 2016 at the Wheatbaker Hotel in Ikoyi, Lagos. For more information, please contact Nana Sonoiki by telephone at  08052500195 or Sumbo Biobaku at 08055099096.

Online Auction: Olumide Oresegun

Arthouse Contemporary is pleased to announce the online auction of Nigerian artist Olumide Oresegun, June 23-26, 2016, on our website, www.arthouse-ng.com.

Olumide Oresegun is a figurative artist who is best known for his hyperrealistic and emotional oil paintings. Inspired by his immediate environment and people from his local community, including his neighbors, friends, and siblings, Oresegun calls attention to the quiet moments of childhood. Whether reading, writing letters, or sleeping, Oresegun’s subjects are caught off guard in a tranquil moment of reflection.

A graduate of distinction at the Yaba College of Technology, Oresegun received international media attention with a recent CNN article that lauded the hyperrealism of his art. Since then, he has become an Internet sensation for the attention to technique and detail in his paintings, with over 3.2 million views on Youtube and over 44,000 followers on Instagram.

These portraits combine technical precision and minute details to suggest tangible presence and dimensionality. Oresegun uses water as a central motif in his paintings, with water droplets falling in arrested motion off bodies and in mid-air. He also pays particular attention to the flowing creases and folds of the fabrics, blankets and sheets that surround the subjects. In other works, he focuses on occupational scenes including metal workers and market sellers. Through these portraits of childhood and kinship, his work elevates the routine environment to reveal the transcendence of the everyday.

Arthouse Contemporary will hold a live online auction of his paintings for three days, beginning on June 23, 2016, 12 PM, and ending on June 26, 2016, 6 PM. Clients will have the option to bid live on the website.

Arthouse Contemporary will host a reception to launch the online auction on Thursday, June 23, 2016, 6 PM at the Renault Showroom, 43B Akin Adesola Street, Victoria Island, Lagos. The original works of art will be on display during this launch event in the presence of the artist. The works will be available for public viewing on Friday, June 24th (10 AM-6PM) and Saturday, June 25th (10 AM-4 PM).

Founded in 2007, Arthouse Contemporary is an international auction house that specialises in modern and contemporary art from West Africa. With auctions held twice a year in Lagos, Arthouse Contemporary aims to create awareness of the scope of contemporary art in the region, encourage international recognition towards its talented artists, and strengthen the economy of its art market.

For more information, please contact Nana Sonoiki by telephone at 08052500195 or Sumbo Biobaku at 08055099096 or Joseph Gergel by email at joseph@arthouse-ng.com.

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For 16th arthouse auction, premium pieces reign

The 16th edition of Arthouse Contemporary auction, coming in less than three months after introducing Affordable sales, is set to prove the resilience of Lagos art market, even in a troubled economic environment.

With Affordable, held in March, the auctioneers added a third sale, making its auctions tri-annual. From May 7-8, 2016, the 16th edition takes off with viewing, which runs into the third day as the sale holds on Monday, 9 at The Wheatbaker Hotel, Ikoyi, Lagos.

Having separated the Affordable – works that sell below 500,000 – from the premiums, there is an indication that the volume of lots has dropped slightly in number for the coming event. However, the texture or class of lots on sale keeps going higher, so suggests the caliber of artists featured in the 16th edition.

In a preview statement, Arthouse notes that as contemporary African art moves to become one of the fastest growing global art markets, the 16th edition “will feature both master works from the modern period and cutting- edge contemporary art from the region’s most celebrated artists.” The auction house lists works as including “100 lots featuring modern masters such as Ben Enwonwu, Yusuf Grillo, Demas Nwoko, Bruce Onobrakpeya, Ato Delaquis, Kolade Oshinowo, Abayomi Barber, Gani Odutokun, Ablade Glover, Ben Osawe, and Akinola Lasekan.” Also on display for the auction are what has been described as leading contemporary artists, including Rom Isichei, Peju Alatise, Sokari Douglas Camp, Ndidi Dike and Modupe Fadugba.

As Lagos is fast becoming a hub for African art market, non-Nigerian artists whose works are featuring in the auction include, Dominique Zimkpe, Paul Onditi, Kofi Agorsor, Mohammed Abba Gana, Paa Joe and Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou.

Sponsored by Standard Chartered Bank, Wheatbaker Hotel and Veuve Clicquot, the auction retains its auctioneer, U.K-based John Dabney.
Among the works for sale viewed via soft copies are The Advent, oil on canvas classic of Abiodun Olaku; Isioma, oil on canvas portrait from Isichei; oil on board portraiture, Threatened Innocence by Grilo; Obitun Dancers, a 1990 painting by Enwonwu; and mixed media Purple Period by Alatise.

The auction, according to Arthouse, will also include three charity lots by artists Uchay Joel Chima, Obinna Makata, and Lekan Onabanjo, in support of Standard Chartered Bank’s ‘Seeing is Believing’, an NG0 that works to prevent avoidable blindness.

In recent years, Arthouse Contemporary has expanded beyond its bi-annual auctions to include the Arthouse Foundation, a non-profit organisation that aims to encourage the creative development of contemporary art in Nigeria, and Arthouse-The Space, which organises exhibitions of contemporary art. Arthouse-The Space recently opened a solo exhibition of Nigerian artist Victor Ekpuk, entitled Coming Home, in April 2016, the first solo exhibition of Ekpuk in Nigeria in over a decade. Arthouse Foundation opens its artist residency programme in a dedicated building in Ikoyi in April 2016, which will host artists with live/work studios throughout the year.

Founded in 2007, Arthouse Contemporary is an international auction house that specialises in modern and contemporary art from West Africa. With auctions held twice a year in Lagos, Arthouse Contemporary aims to create awareness of the scope of contemporary art in the region, encourage international recognition towards its talented artists, and strengthen the economy of its art market.

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